In Vienna, Austria’s capital, more than 50% of first-grade students are unable to speak German adequately, despite many being native-born and having attended kindergarten for at least two years. This alarming trend underscores the emergence of isolated cultural communities where the national language is not emphasized at home.
According to reports from the Express newspaper, in certain districts, an average class of 22 children might see only about five fully comprehending their teacher. Harald Zierfuß, the education spokesperson for the center-right Austrian People’s Party (ÖVP), has highlighted these language barriers as a critical issue. The ÖVP is advocating for compulsory language proficiency evaluations to begin at age three, addressing the issue early.
However, critics from the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ) argue that such measures merely treat symptoms rather than the underlying causes. FPÖ MEP Petra Steger described the situation as a stark illustration of “the failure of migration policy.” She pointed out that every second student in Vienna schools does not speak German at home, with the figure exceeding 70% in some institutions. Steger also raised concerns about native children facing bullying, teachers experiencing intimidation, and instances of severe violence going unpunished.
“Our children deserve safety, education, and protection,” she stated. “Austria must once again be master in its own schoolhouse.” FPÖ parliamentary group leader and education spokesperson Maximilian Krauss echoed these sentiments, criticizing proposals from establishment parties to impose nationwide kindergarten standards based on Vienna’s model. He warned that this would represent “a massive decline in educational standards,” asserting, “What has failed in Vienna must not become the nationwide norm.”
